Each level of the electron couds hold a certain number of electrons. The first holds 2, the second 8, the third 8.(This is the rule used for an electron cloud.) You can base the number of rings by the number of electrons in the particular element.
Carbon monoxide (CO) has 3 bonding clouds. The electron geometry around the carbon atom in CO is trigonal planar.
An element with 4 electron clouds typically has a central atom bonded to four groups of electrons, which could be either atoms or lone pairs. An example of such an element is carbon in the context of methane (CH₄), where the carbon atom forms four single bonds with hydrogen atoms. The arrangement of these bonds results in a tetrahedral geometry, with the four electron clouds around the carbon atom.
Fermium has seven electron shells.
2
it really depends i know for sure that its 3 electron clouds
Zirconium has four electron clouds surrounding its nucleus. These clouds correspond to the four electrons in zirconium's outermost energy level.
The correct number of electron clouds or shells sodium has is 3.
Polonium has 84 electrons.
Technetium has 43 electrons placed on five electron shells.
It has 11 electrons total. These are in 3 shells.
Iron has 26 electrons, so it would have multiple electron clouds corresponding to different energy levels and orbitals. These electron clouds would be distributed in multiple shells around the nucleus according to the principles of quantum mechanics.
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.